I love it, the only thing I noticed, and I'm not entirely sure if it's even a mistake, is that in the third paragraph, where you refer to the body of Klaus, you start off by calling it 763-A, and then switch to 763-1.

I can't help but add some constructive criticism.
First off, since the mass is non-motile, its lower part will soon become a HUGE bedsore, complete with ulcers, due to impeeded blood flow.
Second, if the mass is spread equally across 300 square meters in a layer 10cm thick, and weighs 4 tons, its density is about 0.133 grams per cubic centimeter, which is approximately 1/8 the density of human flesh.
Third, where does the waste go? This thing weighs like 50 grown men, so it must eat like them. Therefore, it ought to excrete something.

I have been encountering the picture in relation to skips, but finally I know where it came from. By its structure and the memetic effect, it reminds me of 597, they could be like a male/female pair. One attracting to the brains, and the other to the milk. Definitely a connection can be made.
2spoopy4yall.

This is one if my favorite scips. It's just so weird and gross in the best ways. Plus the whole mystery of… whatever the hell it's doing and why. Great pic. loved Dr. Blackbox's 'hands-on' approach (fuck your methods, i'm goin' in.)
One thing- I don't understand the Beowulf reference in the title. Am I missing something?

A "Beowulf Cluster" is a group of normal, consumer grade computers networked together so they can function as a sort of DIY supercomputer for parallel computing. The idea is that 763 is like that, but with human brains.

How the hell you got an old-ass article with +100 and only 8 comments? O.o

Despite initial desire to terminate the biological components of Dr. █████ for his betrayal

Gotta say, this is the only part that's actually bad, and fixing it (making it a matter of anomalous contact procedure instead of revenge) would lose nothing overall. But yeah, this is gross and creepy and ever so tantalizing, not to mention tells a slightly different story than similar, newer articles.

I like this, and am genuinely interested in learning more. That being said, I feel like this article ended a bit too soon. I would have appreciated some sort of incident log or containment revision in which 763 displayed some sort of active thought.